Journal of Medical Case Reports (Apr 2017)

Acute symptomatic peri-lead edema 33 hours after deep brain stimulation surgery: a case report

  • Nathan B. Schoen,
  • Walter J. Jermakowicz,
  • Corneliu C. Luca,
  • Jonathan R. Jagid

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-017-1275-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 4

Abstract

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Abstract Background Symptomatic peri-lead edema is a rare complication of deep brain stimulation that has been reported to develop 4 to 120 days postoperatively. Case presentation Here we report the case of a 63-year-old Hispanic man with an 8-year history of Parkinson’s disease who underwent bilateral placement of subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation leads and presented with acute, symptomatic, unilateral, peri-lead edema just 33 hours after surgery. Conclusions We document a thorough radiographic time course showing the evolution of these peri-lead changes and their regression with steroid therapy, and discuss the therapeutic implications of these findings. We propose that the unilateral peri-lead edema after bilateral deep brain stimulation is the result of severe microtrauma with blood–brain barrier disruption. Knowledge of such early manifestation of peri-lead edema after deep brain stimulation is critical for ruling out stroke and infection and preventing unnecessary diagnostic testing or hardware removal in this rare patient population.

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